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  4. Terrorist Transgressions: Gendered Representations of the Terrorist
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Terrorist Transgressions: Gendered Representations of the Terrorist

Date Issued
December 2013
Editor(s)
Malvern, Sue  
Koureas, Gabriel  
Abstract
Terrorism has a variety of contexts, histories and forms which have all been the focus of intense scrutiny in recent years, whilst cultural representations of the terrorist have
received much less attention, which is odd when we consider that terrorism by its very
nature is spectacle. Dissident organisations create images of terrorists as martyrs, heroes or avengers and international counter terrorist agencies visualise them to
provide the threat with a recognisable persona Osama bin Laden for example was variously portrayed as effeminate and sexually depraved and pictures of his dead body were banned from publication by the United States government Terrorist Transgressions examines mages of the terrorist and discusses in what way they challenge societal norms, particularly those surrounding gender. Despite the traditional alliance between
terrorism and masculinity, women have been active in terrorist organisations and through tactics such at suicide bombing have used their very bodies as weapons. Such attacks have subverted cultural constructions of masculinity and femininity and have
had profound repercussions for both the gendering of violence and the terrorist profile.
This book explores how the terrorist is represented and the processes through which they have subsumed so many popular cultural myths. It discusses how a terrorist's capacity for destruction can be linked to their appropriation or rejection of gender stereotypes and includes essays on masculinities in post-conflict Northern Ireland, gendered insurgency, the colonial state of exception, Oedipal rivalries, the German
Red Army Faction, masculinity in Fox television saga 24 and Anders Behring Breivik's sartorial code, in addition to essays that debate the broad imagery that surrounds terrorism's visual cultures it includes pages by artists who question the role of censorship and the physiognomy of evil.
Subjects

Terrorism

Popular cultural myth...

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